Bird

And by my word, your bonnie bird
In danger shall not tarry;
So, though the waves are raging white,
I'll row you o'er the ferry.

Campbell: Lord Ullin's Daughter.

Bird is the Anglo-Saxon bird, the young of any animal, hence
bride, verb, beran, to bring forth.

A bird of ill-omen.

A person who is regarded as unlucky; one who is in the habit of
bringing ill-news. The ancients thought that some birds indicated good
luck, and others evil. Even to the present day many look upon owls,
crows, and ravens as unlucky birds; swallows and storks as lucky ones.

Ravens, by their acute sense of smell, discern the savour of dying
bodies, and, under the hope of preying on them, light on chimney-tops
or flutter about sick rooms; hence the raven indicates death. Owls
screech when bad weather is at hand, and as foul weather often precedes
sickness, so the owl is looked on as a funeral bird.

A bird of passage.

A person who shifts from place to place; a temporary visitant, like
a cuckoo, the swallows, starlings, etc.

A jail-bird.

(See Jail.)

The bird of Juno.

The peacock.

Minerva's bird is either the cock or the owl; that of Venus is the
dove.

The Arabian bird. The phoenix. The green bird tells everything
a person wishes to know. (Cherry and Fairstar.) The talking
bird spoke with a human voice, and could bid all other birds join
in concert. (Arabian Nights.) Old birds are not to be caught
with chaff. Experience teaches wisdom.

One beats the bush, and another takes the bird.

The workman does the work, the master makes the money. `Tis the
early bird that catches the worm.

Early to bed and early to rise,
Makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.

A little bird told me so.

From Eccles. x. 20: “Curse not the king, no not in thy thought, ...
for a bird of the air shall carry the voice, and that which hath wings
shall tell the matter.”